Tags
Aaron Ginsburg, Abstract Studio, Archer & Armstrong, Astro City, Becky Cloonan, Brain Boy, Brent Eric Anderson, Brian Wood, Captain America, Carlos Pacheco, Clone, Dark Horse, David Lopez, David Schulner, DC Comics, Eternal Warrior, FBP: Federal Bureau of Physics, Fred Van Lente, Gerard Way, Ghosted, Goran Sudzuka, Greg Pak, Image, Indestructible Hulk, J. Michael Straczynski, Jonathan Hickman, Jordie Bellaire, Joshua Williamson, Juan Jose Ryp, Kurt Busiek, Mark Waid, Matteo Scalera, Miroslav Mrva, Nick Pitarra, Pere Perez, R.B. Silva, Rachel Rising, Rick Remender, Robbi Rodriguez, Shaun Simon, Sidekick, Simon Oliver, Terry Moore, The Manhattan Projects, Tom Mandrake, Trevor Hairsine, Valiant, Vertigo, Wade McIntyre, X-Men
So far behind, but certainly not out of mind…
- Sidekick #2 (An improvement over #1 built primarily on Flyboy’s backstory. Still burdened by a few “too far” moments, but certainly good enough to warrant another issue.)
- Eternal Warrior #1 (Pak and Hairsine’s opening salvo is savagely smart and beautifully brutal. A welcome addition to an already outstanding Valiant lineup.)
- FBP: Federal Bureau of Physics #3 (“The collapse has begun,” indeed. I’m out.)
- Clone #10 (Goshdarn it! I really thought we were going to escape the issue with a happy ending!)
- Indestructible Hulk #13 (If I could go back in time, I’d pass not only on this issue but on the entire series. I can’t, so I’ll just jump off now. Unfortunately, the House I was promised never quite opened its doors to the exciting interpersonal possibilities.)
- Rachel Rising #19 (The best issue yet? You bet! And that’s saying a lot.)
- Captain America #11 (I figured I’d try it now that Cap’s back in the real world and all. Didn’t really care for it. Too many “See what I just did?” moments from Remender. But I’ll cut it a break for what it is: a transition. What it’ll transition to…? Well, that’s the question, isn’t it? If the next one doesn’t answer the question, though, I’m out until a new writer comes on.)
- Brain Boy #1 (Wildly uneven effort from the architect of Archer & Armstrong. The art from R.B. Silva, Rob Lean, and Ego is terrific, however. All together, I’ll probably see this three-issue arc through ’til the end.)
- Astro City #4 (Another terrific story from Kurt Busiek.)
- The Manhattan Projects #14 (Hickman and Pitarra don’t disappoint. They don’t know how to disappoint. Love the final splash, which sells a crazy-eyed, wrench-wielding Oppenheimer much in the same way #12 sold a chainsaw-of-relativity-sporting Einstein.)
- The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys #4 (Just as crazy as we’ve come to expect! Hey, it’s the Gerard Way.)
- X-Men #4 (Certainly met expectations–my low, low expectations. Thanks Battle of the Atom!)
- Ghosted #3 (Still keeping my interest. Reads not unlike Revival, really. Further, seems to do some things that Dream Thief should’ve done. Sticking around.)
- Archer & Armstrong #13 (This is why I’ll buy anything Fred Van Lente. Just keeps getting better and better. Something tells me we’ll be writing more about this when we wrap up the month.)
Turning pages,
Scott